"NAK" 2006 Obituary

NAKAGAWA o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2006-03-07 published
KOYANAGI,
Michi (née
KAI)
Peacefully in her 81st year at Humber River Regional Hospital
on March 6, 2006. Beloved wife of the late Joe Isao. Loving mother
of Michael and special mother-in-law to Louise. Cherished grandmother
to Jeffrey and Stephanie. Dear sister of Bill (Clara), Don (Margaret),
Gordon (Ruth), Samuel (late Jean)
NAKAGAWA, Grace (late Hiromu)
FUJIKI, Betty (Tom)
HAYAKAWA, and Vi (Allan "Mush")
ARIMA. Predeceased
by brothers Sam (Sue), Jimmy (Mimi) and sister Irene. Dear aunt
to several nieces and nephews. Special thanks to the staff at
Sunnybrook and Women's College Hospital and Humber River Regional
Hospital. Friends may call at the Ward Funeral Home, 2035 Weston
Rd. (north of Lawrence Ave.), Weston on Wednesday, March 8 from
2-4 and 7-9 p.m. A service will be held in the Ward Chapel on
Thursday, March 9 at 1 p.m. Interment to follow at Glendale Memorial
Gardens. (Albion Rd. and Hwy. 7). In lieu of flowers, donations
may be made to the Heart and Stroke Foundation. Condolences may
be sent to michi.koyanagi@wardfh.com

NAKAMICHI o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2006-03-20 published
MORITA,
James "
Jim"
Harumi
Tragically as the result of a car accident, on Saturday, March 18,
2006 in his 78th year. Beloved husband of Mary (née
CHIBA,) loving
father of Gail
MATSUBA (Paul), Glenn (Tatiana), Carrie
THURSTON
(Tim) and Darren. Cherished grandfather of Erin and Sara
MATSUBA,
Natasha, Alexei and Kolya
MORITA, and Owen and Jesse
THURSTON.
Dearly missed by his brother Paul, sisters Shirley
TANAKA
(Byron)
and Joyce NAKAMICHI
(HughSEARLE,) brother George (Marilyn) and
sisters-in-law Shirley
MORITA and Aileen
CHIBA.
Fondly remembered
by many nephews and nieces. The family will receive Friends at
Highland Funeral Home, 3280 Sheppard Ave. East, Toronto, 416-773-0933
on Tuesday, March 21, 2006 from 2 p.m.-4 p.m. and 7 p.m.-9 p.m.
A funeral service will be held on Wednesday, March 22, 2006 in
the chapel at the Highland Funeral Home at 11: 00 a.m., followed
by interment at Mount Pleasant Cemetery. Online condolences,
tributes and memories can be offered at: www.starclassifieds.com

NAKAMURA o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2006-03-18 published
Tom HODGSON,
Artist And Athlete: (1924-2006)
The last surviving member of the Painters Eleven group that introduced
abstract art to Toronto was an anti-academic who favoured spontaneity
over skill. He was also a champion canoeist
By John CHAPUT,
Special to The Globe and Mail, Page S9
Tom HODGSON grew up on Toronto's Centre Island near Hanlon's
Point, a locale named after the legendary 19th-century rower
Ned HANLON, but chose canoeing as his water sport. That proved
wise as he became a Canadian Olympian on the water and even symbolic
in his lifelong occupation as an artist. Whereas a rower gazes
back on the water he has spanned, the paddler always looks ahead.
Technically a master of representational fundamentals, Mr.
HODGSON
enjoyed a long career in advertising, could paint striking realistic
portraits, and picked up extra money doing courtroom sketches.
His quest as an artist, however, was to find new means to express
creativity, even if it meant suppressing skill and rebelling
against an establishment he regarded as stifling.
"He thought the most creative people were the young who weren't
influenced by anything," says daughter Lise
SNAJDR. "My father
was a skilled draftsman, but, in a way, he was against skill
because it was all stuff you picked up from life experience.
He was left-handed, but he went through a period of drawing only
with his right hand in an attempt not to be too skillful. As
it turned out, he developed an ambidexterity that proved to be
another skill.
"His painting was spontaneous -- everything he did was -- but
he wanted it to look that way. He could be free and liberal with
paint, and put his feelings into a work."
Described by some as "anti-intellectual," Mr.
HODGSON was, in
fact, a deep thinker who would be better described as anti-academic.
"He had his own ideas," says artist Gary
MILLER of Peterborough,
Ontario "He had great admiration for Willem de Kooning, but he
didn't want to just cater to someone's opinion. He was stubborn
and, because he was anti-academic, there was a movement to squelch
Tom."
In his book Creativity Is Change, Mr.
HODGSON declared skill
to be "in some ways the antithesis of creativity, a sort of disrespect
for man's time, and certainly for his individualism&hellip
"Creativity is curiosity, concern, trial and error, invention,
not knowing, discovery. Skill is knowing how to do something….
The essence of creativity is uniqueness."
Mr. HODGSON was sometimes dismissed as a "jock painter" because
many couldn't see athleticism and aesthetics harmonized in one
personality. He won more than a dozen national titles at the
juvenile and junior levels, and then nine more as an adult. In
1952, he took eighth place at the 1952 Helsinki Games in the
1,000-metre tandem with Art Johnson. At the Melbourne Games in
1956, he placed ninth in the 10,000-metre tandem with Bill Stevenson.
Standing just under six feet tall and weighing about 140 pounds,
Mr. HODGSON was a whirlwind in the studio, his frenetic energy
bustling as if his body was struggling to keep up with his train
of thought. Although articulate, he could lapse into a stutter
that affected his speech in childhood but was brought under control
through therapy he took early in his professional life.
Mr. HODGSON's first serious painting was done from 1943 to 1945
while he was training as a pilot and gunner in the Royal Canadian
Air Force. The Second World War ended and he was discharged before
he could be assigned to combat, but he made numerous renderings
of military life and later donated them to the War Art Museum.
He first achieved artistic prominence a decade later as one of
the Painters Eleven, the association of Toronto avant-garde painters
who challenged artistic conservatism and gave the city its first
healthy dose of abstract modernism. With Jack
BUSH,
OscarCAHEN,
Hortense GORDON, Alexandra
LUKE, Jock
MacDONALD, Ray
MEAD, Kazuo
NAKAMURA, William
RONALD, Harold
TOWN and Walter
YARWOOD, they
broadened the scope of Canadian art through mutual support and
group exhibitions from their 1953 formation through their gradual
fragmentation and dissolution from 1956 to 1960. Their affiliation
was more professional than theoretical; they used disparate approaches
and had no aesthetic commonalities.
Works of the Painters Eleven grew in demand and value in the
'60s, but just a little too late for Mr.
HODGSON to take full
advantage of it. Short of materials at the time, he painted over
some of the canvasses that could have brought in good money.
Bad luck also struck in 1993 when a fire at his cottage destroyed
many of the works he had stored there.
As a senior instructor at the Ontario College of Art, he was
in the forefront of outrage at the upheaval of the school brought
about by the policies of new president Roy
ASCOTT in 1971-72.
As a tenured professor, Mr.
HODGSON was able to keep his job
while many of his colleagues were fired, only to quit himself
within a few months. Ironically, he was one of only two people
on staff who had opposed the institution of tenure at the Ontario
College of Art in the 1960s.
"Tom believed in the process of creativity as one of constant
change and in the freedom of artists," says Mr.
MILLER, then
a student at the Ontario College of Art. "
ASCOTT and later Royden
RABINOVITCH were from the New York school, very radical and modern,
and they were telling students their work was garbage. So Tom
broke away, formed the Z School, and took half the student body
with him."
As protests go, it was symbolically powerful and a practical
failure.
"The Z School lasted about six months," recalls Don
MORRISON,
an artist and illustrator who was Mr.
HODGSON's long-time friend
and business partner. "You can't very well have a school without
a structure or bureaucracy."
Mr. MORRISON and Mr.
HODGSON shared studio space, first on Church
Street across from St. James Cathedral, then in a warehouse on
the corner of Dufferin and Bloor. Those were also venues for
Drawing Night in Canada figure classes held every Thursday. The
classes were conducted as the antithesis of the typically sombre
gathering of sketchers and painters around a nude model.
"Usually at classes like that, it's like listening for a pin
to drop," Mr.
MORRISON says. Drawing Night in Canada was different.
"These were noisy, vocal, 10 to 18 artists talking and joking.
Anyone could grab a cold beer for 50 cents. The model would talk
back and tell stories, too."
Inevitably, Mr.
MORRISON wearied of the back-lane access to the
warehouse and told his partner he'd prefer a storefront studio.
"A storefront?" Mr.
HODGSON retorted. "I need a storefront like
I need a hole in the head." In a matter of weeks, they had two
storefront studios, one of them facing the historically infamous
but architecturally engaging Mental Health Centre at 999 Queen
Street West.
"Tom was impulsive, just like his painting. He would do exactly
what he wanted," Mr.
MORRISON says. "He built a swimming pool
in the backyard of every house he owned. He would attempt to
do almost anything. One day, he had a plumber come to his home
on MacPherson Avenue because of a leak and the plumber said a
lot of digging was necessary to get at the incoming line in front
of the house. When he told Tom what it would cost, Tom said:
'I'll tell you what, I'll dig it myself.' After he had dug this
enormous hole, I told Tom: 'Well, it may have been a lot of work
to dig, but it'll be easy to fill in.' 'I don't want to fill
it in,' he told me. 'I'm going to build a ramp so I can drive
my bike right under the front porch and into the basement.' He
had three motorcycles -- a
BMW, a Husqvarna, and a Can-Am. So
he built the ramp.
"It didn't occur to me that if he took the ramp to come in the
basement, he'd use it to get out, too. I was renting on the second
floor, and the first time he revved up one his bikes --
VRRRROOOOM!
I jumped right out of bed."
Mr. HODGSON's energetic and impulsive nature, bohemian cultural
surroundings and enjoyment of good times were an ideal formula
for trouble in a man ripe for midlife crisis. He had a number
of lovers and ended his first marriage to Wilma
HODGSON before
settling into a peaceful lifestyle with his second wife, Catherine
GOOD.
They moved to Peterborough in 1990. A few years later,
he began to display the first signs of Alzheimer's. He was the
last surviving member of the Painters Eleven.
Thomas Sherlock
HODGSON was born on June 5, 1924, in Toronto.
He died on February 27, 2006, near Peterborough, Ontario, of
Alzheimer's disease. He is survived by his sons Mark, Rand and
Timothy, daughters Lise Snajdr and Kara Warburton, and sister
Jane HODGSON. He was predeceased by his wife, Catherine.

NAKAMURA o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2006-04-07 published
YAMAMOTONEGORO,
Mieko (née
TAMURA)
(November 8th, 1915-April 1st, 2006)
Mieko YAMAMOTONEGORO passed away after a lengthy illness at
Mount Sinai Hospital on April 1st, 2006. "Mimi" was the beloved
wife of the late Toshio
YAMAMOTO,
Sr. and the late Ichiei
NEGORO,
loving mother to Toshio and the late Patricia
YAMAMOTO,
Glenn
and Mary Lou
YAMAMOTO, and Naomi
TSUMURA, dear grandmother of
Jennifer YAMAMOTO,
Wendy and Terry
CHAPMAN, Robert and Kara
YAMAMOTO,
Sean and Amanda
YAMAMOTO,
LeanneYAMAMOTO, and Lori
TSUMURA,
cherished great-grandmother of Noah and Kyla
CHAPMAN,
JonGALE
and Dawn GALE, cherished aunt of Lois
TANI,
Mark and Linda
NAKAMURA
and family, Roy and Kelly
TAMURA, and Sachi
TAMURA.
She is also
survived by her sisters: Kiyoshi
SATO,
EikoAIDA, June
OKURA,
Yachi KOBAYASHI,
HiroAOKI, Chiyo
MITOBE and their families.
Friends and family may call at the Cardinal Funeral Home "Earle
Elliott" Chapel, 715 Dovercourt Road (Ossington Subway - Delaware
Exit) on Saturday, April 8, 2006 from 11-12 p.m. A complete Funeral
Service will begin at 12 p.m. In lieu of flowers, donations to
the Heart and Stroke Foundation, the Canadian Cancer Society,
or the Salvation Army would be appreciated by the family. "Love
is a circle that doth restless move in the same sweet eternity
of love." Robert Herrick 1591-1674

NAKANO o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2006-01-13 published
OIKAWA,
Kiyoko "
Kay" (née
NAKANO)
BornNovember 7, 1919, Kiyoko
OIKAWA slipped away peacefully,
at the Hamilton General Hospital, on Wednesday, January 11, 2006,
at the age of 86 years. Beloved wife of the late Mitsuro Norman
OIKAWA.
Loving mother of Dana, Vel and her husband Paul
LAMOTHE,
and Lyle and his wife
HollyYIP.
Will be sadly missed by her
grandchildren. Dear sister of the late Koichiro, Stony and his
late wife Joan, Jack and Eleanor, Kayoko and her late husband
Mitsugu SHIMODA,
Ayako and her late husband Harry
KONDO, Ken
and his late wife
Marion, and Mariko and Joe
UMETSU.
Kay is resting
at The Dodsworth and Brown Funeral Home Robinson Chapel (King St.
E., at Wellington), Hamilton, 905-522-2496, where the family
will receive Friends on Sunday 1-5 p.m. Funeral Service will
be held from the funeral home Chapel on Monday, January 16, 2006
at 10: 30 a.m. Interment White Chapel Memorial Gardens. Donations
in memory of Kay to the Cerebral Palsy Foundation in lieu of
Koden would be appreciated by the family.

NAKATA o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2006-04-13 published
NAKATA,
HughIsao
Peacefully in his 86th year on Tuesday, April 11, 2006 at Oakville
Trafalgar Memorial Hospital with his family at his side. Beloved
husband of Yoshi (née
NISHIMURA) for 51 years. Cherished father
of Brenda and her husband Grant
GEROW.
Loving grandpa of Austin.
Survived by sisters Sets, Hedy, Fudge, Kab, Mac, Kim, and brother
George. Predeceased by brothers Kenichi, Kenji and Takeo. Hugh
will be fondly remembered and sadly missed by all of us. Family
and Friends will be received at the Glen Oaks Memorial Chapel,
3164 Ninth Line (Dundas/403), Oakville on Friday, April 14 from
2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Funeral service will be held in the chapel on
Saturday, April 15 at 2 p.m. Interment Glen Oaks Memorial Gardens.
Reception to follow. If desired, donations may be made to the
Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre, Toronto or Oakville Trafalgar
Memorial Hospital.